Insights
Functional medicine and chronic diseases

Agetech World spoke to Pete Williams, founder of Functional Medicine Associates, on how functional medicine can address cognitive decline and chronic diseases, and support optimal ageing
What is functional medicine in a nutshell and what is its role in addressing chronic diseases?
Conventional medicine represents one problem solved by one answer, which the majority of the time is pharmaceutically led. This can work to an extent, but most chronic diseases are multifactorial with numerous things going on at the same time.
Functional medicine gives you a different way to look at chronic diseases as it looks at the ones that have multifactorial consequences. For this reason, trying to treat a disease with one medication isn’t going to work and so, it’s important not only to deal with the symptoms but to actually deal with the reasons why the symptoms are there in the first place.
What does it offer that conventional medicine can’t?
Chronic diseases are multifactorial. If you look at drug trials and interventions proposed and used for Alzheimer’s disease so far, none of them have worked and the ones that are still available don’t work that well.
Professor Dale Bredesen always uses this summary to explain why this happens: you might be looking at an object that has a hundred holes and you have to try to plug all of those holes before you truly get to solving Alzheimer’s disease. A drug may plug a hole but there are still 99 more.
That’s when you have to think: what else do we need to know? And what else do we need to do to try to plug as many holes as possible? The more holes that we plug the more likely we are going to see a reduction or a slowing down of symptoms.
You often use the Bredesen Protocol, what is it and how does it work?
The Bredesen Protocol gives you a really good instruction booklet which is a multifactorial way of looking at Alzheimer’s, rather than the usual ‘here’s the medication to use’.
Alzheimer is not a disease that you suddenly get, it’s a disease that develops over many decades. There are some genes that predispose the patient who needs an understanding of what else predispose them or accelerate their risk of Alzheimer’s disease.
The Bredesen Protocol gives you a robust starting point to look at an individual from a multifactorial way. When using the Bredesen Protocol the number one thing to look at is if the patients are genetically predisposed. The key gene that you would look at is the APOE e4 e4, the most common genetic variant associated with Alzheimer’s disease. If you have an understanding that you have the APOE e4 e4 or that you are family predisposed, you might want to start doing something about it decades before there’s any risk.
This means understanding what you can do from a lifestyle perspective that is going to reduce your risk: not drinking, not smoking and doing consistent physical exercise.

Pete Williams is the founder of Functional Medicine Associates (FMA). He is a medical scientist with over 20 years of experience applying Functional Medicine in clinical practice. His work is based on the Functional Medicine approach to treatment of the root cause rather than the symptoms. Pete is also an advisor to nutraceutical and lab testing companies.
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The Agetech World research roundup

Super-ageing key, Seaweed’s special, hair-raising breakthrough and more
The secret of how ‘super-agers’ have the mental agility of people decades younger is centred around brain health, say US researchers.
Some elderly people are able to regenerate brain cells twice as quickly as other, healthy adults, of the same age.
While it has recently been established that we continue creating brain cells throughout our lives, the new research suggests that some people age without any signs of cognitive decline because their bodies are much better at renewing brain cells.
This is known as neurogenesis and happens in the hippocampus – which is crucial for memory.
“Super agers had twice the neurogenesis of the other healthy older adults,” said Professor Orly Lazarov, of the University of Illinois at Chicago.
“Something in their brains enables them to maintain a superior memory. I believe hippocampal neurogenesis is the secret ingredient, and the data support that.
Amino acid alert
“This is a big step forward in understanding how the human brain processes cognition, forms memories and ages.”
A super-ager is someone aged 80 or older who exhibits cognitive function that is comparable to an average person who is middle-aged.
A study of more than 270,000 participants from the UK Biobank has uncovered a link between a common amino acid and how long men live.
Researchers found that higher levels of tyrosine – an amino acid found in protein-rich foods and often marketed as a focus-boosting supplement – were associated with shorter life expectancy in men.
The study published in Aging-US, from the University of Hong Kong and the University of Georgia, examined the role of phenylalanine and tyrosine in longevity.
Their findings suggest that higher tyrosine levels are associated with shorter life expectancy in men, raising the possibility that longevity strategies may need to differ by sex.
‘Seaing’ into the future
Researchers are using a unique Australian seaweed that mimics the biological functions of human skin to develop sustainable, regenerative wound-healing, anti-ageing solutions for complex skin injuries and burns.
The healing power of seaweed is not a new discovery.
There is evidence that it was chewed medicinally in what is now Chile more than 14,000 years ago, and that seaweed has been a versatile resource for Indigenous Australians for millennia.
It is now believed there are some 12,000 species of seaweed around the world, and that current scientific understanding of the possible benefits of those species is just scratching the surface.
Over the last decade, University of Wollongong researchers at the Intelligent Polymer Research Institute (IPRI) have been investigating a unique Australian green seaweed with antibacterial, anti-inflammatory and regenerative properties.
The team believes this discovery could revolutionise complex wound healing and boost longevity.
Link between obesity and muscle loss
Researchers at the UK’s University of Birmingham have identified a new mechanism by which obesity may contribute to muscle loss in older adults.
The study, published in the Journal of Cachexia, Sarcopenia and Muscle and delivered through the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Birmingham Biomedical Research Centre (BRC) shows for the first time that extracellular vesicles – tiny particles released by fat tissue – can directly trigger muscle atrophy in human cells.
Sarcopenic obesity, where excess body fat coexists with reduced muscle mass and strength, is an increasingly common condition in ageing populations and is associated with frailty, reduced mobility, and poorer overall health outcomes.
It is estimated to affect around 11 per cent of the population.
In the study, researchers found that extracellular vesicles released from obese adipose tissue caused significant thinning of muscle fibres derived from older adults, whilst researchers found
that muscle cells derived from younger adults were resilient to these effects.
Lead researcher Dr Joshua Price, first author and Postdoctoral Researcher, said: “It isn’t just having more fat tissue that matters.
“Obesity changes how fat tissue behaves and how it communicates with muscle.
“Ageing muscle is far more vulnerable to these altered signals, which helps explain why muscle loss accelerates with obesity later in life.”
Hair-raising breakthrough
Japanese regenerative health firm OrganTech has pinpointed the trio of cells required to prevent hair loss.
The Tokyo-based biotech said its researchers have defined a three-cell configuration capable of reconstructing hair follicle organ germs to sustain a hair growth cycle.
The work, published in Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, provides a potential blueprint for regeneration of hair follicles; which are complex, mini-organs that repeatedly manifest through growth, regression, rest and shedding cycles.
Previous regenerative approaches have combined epithelial stem cells and dermal papilla cells to form early follicular structures.
But, working with researchers at the RIKEN Center for Biosystems Dynamics Research, OrganTech identified a third, previously uncharacterised, cell type that appears to be essential for complete regeneration.
This mesenchymal cell was shown to play a critical role in triggering the transition from the resting to the growth phase of the hair cycle and in driving the follicle’s downward extension into surrounding tissue.
OrganTech CEO Yoshio Shimo, said: “This work defines a foundational cellular configuration for functional hair follicle regeneration.
“Beyond hair biology, it reinforces our broader strategy of organ-level regenerative medicine, where precisely orchestrated epithelial and mesenchymal interactions enable stable and functional tissue reconstruction.”









